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Re: Krypton-85
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Jerry Cohen <jjcohen@PRODIGY.NET>
An: radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu <radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu>
Datum: Samstag, 23. Februar 2002 21:24
Betreff: Krypton-85
At the operating fuel reprocessing plants in Europe, are they retaining &
storing noble gases such as
Kr-85, or releasing them to the atmosphere? Could anyone provide
information on this? Thank you.
----------------------------------------------------------------
I read your mail after I had been four weeks in Japan. Maybe you have
already received comprehensive information.
Both Sellafield and La Hague do not retain Kr-85, but discharge it. The new
reprocessing plant at Rokkasho in Japan, which I visited 10 days ago, will
not retain it either after operation will start. The small experimental
Japanese reprocessing plant in Tokai discharges it.
Germany once planned to construct a reprocessing plant in Wackersdorf,
Bavaria. This plant would most probably have been equipped with a removal
system for Kr-85 - not so much because of radiation protection
considerations, but more of political reasons to please the Austrian
government, which pleaded for one. The Nuclear Research Center in Karlsruhe
had developed two or three methods for removing it on a large scale,
together with elegant methods to immobilize it and store it safely for
decay. The Wackersdorf plant was cancelled about 15 years ago.
I have to admit, that I do not really know about reprocessing for military
purposes in France and Great Britain, but would be more than surprised if
they would separate Kr-85. During the cold war the superpowers used the
Kr-85 concentrations in air to estimate, how much plutonium the "enemy"
produced!
Hope this helps.
Franz
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